tv DW News Asia Deutsche Welle August 10, 2023 7:15pm-7:30pm CEST
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was an 80 year old british olympian who bought his ticket 18 years ago. and the caribbean, mother and daughter do over one their tickets gonna contest the trio, floated around the wait list for just a few minutes before returning safely to her car for us to describe. we can obviously watching w use. let's get you a reminder of the top story we're following for you. the leaders of the west african block eco. why say they will deploy a standby for us to reinstate the i was the president of the share agirri and president host of the summit folder to new but said nothing is off the table including military intervention. that's all for now. we're in good craft. thanks very much for watching the very well today we'll make for jeff to just in the gym. loved about anything step away from the spot. i'm not even allowed to go to my own car and everyone was later
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holes in every single day stuff. getting you ready to meet the gentleman enjoying me. rachel stood on dw. what do you see? it really is possible to reverse the researchers and scientists all over the world or in a race against time. they are peers and rivals with one daring goals to help smart nature. the more likes watching it on youtube. dw documentary, the, you're watching dw, use agent coming up as easy as possible that addresses the conflict in the isolated state of money for women and their children, a leg wishing and caps for the displaced waiting for the findings went on with the way to go. and china takes the lead in regulating artificial intelligence. although
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the us is still a head on innovation. a global arrival receives another clamp down on the way sensitive text can be made the, to my benefits all in welcome use, fruit, kerosene, and money pool and least a spock. ronald gundy wasting no time in his 1st pile of entry states following the suspension of his defamation conviction in getting stuck into prime minister and arrange, promoting the opposition leader accused him of inaction on ethnic classes in one of the country's most remote states. let's listen into what else was say. then, i want to appeal to both communities of money, poor through this house to cease violence. violence is not a solution to any problem. let's talk them. we're in discussions with the may the
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community as well as with the cookies. i appealed to both communities to sit down and talk to the government of india to find a solution to this crisis i'm. i've done it in a few days ago. i went to money poor our prime minister did not go to dates. he has not gone because for him, money poor is not in the money put into sunday night. tens of thousands of flight they homes and both sides have reported k children. night has come to our stands to these women from the group you try have been living in this really is gone for weeks. the woman here claim the homes with a duck by the members of the majority community, the meeting due to the game 9 in sports, 9 months pregnant when she fled. she give birth here at the gump.
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us past the houses, no neighborhood with toys, and there was gone for everywhere we didn't know what to do. the situation became so difficult that we had thrown away from all houses. are 2 people, many of them in jeopardy, dozens of allowing me to, to teach studies comes more than 60000 people has been displeased since, but it's like violence between the tribes cookie and meet the communities it up to in made this here. and it's a conflict that has not spared the most fundamental women have been targeted to, to the receptionist reports the incidence of sexual violence. and for those who survived their life, a now largely limited to the relief gums and spit in the bas newport district who came in again, the new p militants attacked us and burnt or houses is here. so we had no idea about this. as everything happened suddenly in the night. so that's why we
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gathered in a big house and spent the night there and kept waiting for the break of dawn to well. and if i decide to the next morning, the federal and state forces came to rescue us. and escorted us and our children to the relief camp. they're doing hope here to the party. government has been criticized, but it's tunneling of the situation. many accused them of turning a blind eye to one of the worst findings in the i have seen in use for these women leaving the home has been one of the worst foot backs in these gums this year didn't last grief and go and with so much uncertainty, they have like the idea on how to deepen their lives on the china is one of the most availed societies on a c, c t, v cameras or every way it's a digital strait jacket. facial recognition technology is used in everything from
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day to day law enforcement to political repression. still, china drafted regulations this week requiring funds to obtain conceptual legal permission to use the tech and other example of how the chinese, a winning the race to regulate itself off official intelligence. even if the us is more innovative with chat g p t. we'll talk about that in a minute. first, look at how pervasive the tech has become in china. you don't need a ticket to ride the assembly in beijing. at this station you just scan your palm and using a i, the machine dev. it's the fair from your bank account robots or does a stock at this restaurant work and being greedy and needed to make the dishes and serve the food machines using a i r part of everyday life in china, the
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unlike and some other countries. this doesn't seem to worry people. nearly everyone pays using apps like we check or only pay are these record information such as your location and file metric data. but here it seems. pragmatism takes precedence over data security question. and then we got to do much about language we chat. so natalie pays very popular. now, of course, when you use these apps, they store your data, show you go to them to move them, you can't change it. it's supposed to make your life easier. on the phone being you because of your doesn't chart, official intelligence was created by people way and i think people will keep control of it. that corner of what it should take. this whole, these robots that the global a form in shanghai can work as mechanics. this one called meant by has already carried out more than 1000 operations across china. and this south driving electric truck is already loading and unloading ships at some container ports. it can even
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change its own battery. use the rapid charging it actually takes about one hour and 30 minutes rapid charge. so right now for the battery, only 5 minutes that much quicker. this chad pond called ernie is the star of the fair. it's intended to rival the american chat, g, b, t, and can create pictures and text speak and write entire articles. although currently only in chinese, authorities want to limit the development of on tournaments, learning systems and sensitive areas such as politics. a disadvantage for any developers in china. there are also shortages of sophisticated chips and semi conductors. the technology is everywhere in surveillance, cameras and facial recognition devices. what's clear is that a ice prime purpose is to serve the communist party of the both state journals,
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deputy china. a bureau chief is josh said it was kicked out during the pandemic and is joining us from sol. china is cyberspace administration is prohibiting companies from using facial recognition to analyze this new city or religion and of ones. it must be used to endanger national security. how public interest or disrupt social order. but that would apply to allstate, bodies will it yeah that's, that's exactly right. um. so these, these new laws um, are quite restrictive on their surface in terms of how facial recognition can be used. but they leave a really large car bout for national security, which in china is it is a very broad concept. and it's one that includes political security, which basically means that sort of anything that the communist party sees as going against this interest that they could use. they can use these technologies to, to track and uh, and eliminate them during your time. and china,
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did you get the feeling at any stage that the chinese state could take this is that too far, and people will ravel a one day for you to a or actually that the that's a really fascinating question because that actually happened. you know, when i, when i lived in china, before i was, was expelled, most charged people were, were actually quite comfortable in that digital, the straight jacket that you described. but that actually changed at the end of last year at the end of the 0 coded period in china when, when the time changed over at a locked down several cities sometimes for weeks at a time using these technologies. um, so you know, for most people in china, especially people and people in rich cities like shanghai, this is the 1st time that they had experienced these technologies being used to control their movements and control their lives. and they didn't like it. and, and at the end of the year, sort of november december, you actually saw these massive protest if you remember in across the country. uh,
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that helped sort of speed the end of 0 cove. and so there is now, there are signs that people are starting to, to, to really push back against it. you've co, also the book on this island state. what's it mean to the development of artificial intelligence itself, with the us, a head on one level innovation, but china drawing up the legal framework at the bottom. it or yeah, you don't have to. i think what we're starting to see is 2 different models. okay. i development emerge, you know, and they diverge more or less along a logical salt mines. so in the us, the emphasis is on innovation is largely unregulated and it's sort of an echo of what happens with the internet and social media. so american tech companies are using ai to basically rewrite the rules of, of the economy of entertainment of culture or social interaction. and the government is scrambling to keep up in china, at least at the moment. security is what matters and it comes as parties,
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security matters, most of all. and the result is this on the door a terry and model where the state really has carte blanche to use a i to defend its own interest, but companies are really restricted. so, you know, the china model kind of heads off a lot of their unforeseen negative consequences of a i potentially though it does that at the cost of, of stifling innovation. the use also trying to play catch up is expect to find a low to be approved by the end of the year regulating a systems like chat cvt. would you argue? because europe obviously is behind is speed of the essence here. right? where, you know, it's so it's interesting when people talk about china, there's this cliche, right? um and it's often a mistake and why the chinese government can act more decisively because it doesn't have to bother with debate. but the one instance of which the communist party really has active, active decisively is what it's such as an existential threat. and i mean there's a big of long seen technology and those terms and something that, you know,
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1st and foremost, needs to be controlled. so when it comes to technologies that involve sydney, like overnight, like the internet or a, i generated a i like chat cheap u t. that decides that this could really make a big difference. so it is, it is difficult for democracies to, to stay abreast of what's happening and then, and then then regulate technology tools the surveillance stage and will st. joe's deputy china bureau chief just to thank you for joining us today on dw, and you guys are and the geo politics of this story keep playing out today by jing responding angrily to a new executive order issued by us president joe biden. it restricts american investments insensitive high tech sectors in china and is expected to take effect next year. the aim is to keep us capital and expertise from helping china is military modernization. chinese officials say the tech or violates market economy principles and that they reserve the right to take measurements. that wraps up our
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